Genesis means what it says: Basil (AD 329–379)

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are publishing some of the articles from the archives for historical interest, such as this. For teaching and
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Some accuse creationists of taking an excessively literal view of Scripture, particularly
Genesis, and that this view is something of recent origin, that Christians in the
early Church took a more allegorical view of things. The writings of Basil show
this not to be true.1

Basil was bishop of Caesarea Mazaca, Cappadocia, from AD 370–379. He argued
strongly against various heresies of that day. In particular, he defended the vital
biblical doctrine of the Trinity against the Arian Heresy which denied the deity
of Christ, and later against the Sabellian (modalist) Heresy which denied the distinctness
of the three Persons. Basil’s classic Trinitarian formula, that God is three
Persons (hypostases) in one substance (ousia), is still one of
the best summaries of the Biblical doctrine, and is accepted by all branches of
orthodox Christianity. [See also the Q&A: God
and Q&A: Jesus Christ for biblical defences
of the Trinity and deity of Christ.]

Basil was also a monk, pastor, and church leader. He established charitable institutions,
hospitals and schools, and organised famine relief in 368. He greatly improved the
lot of lepers in Cappadocia. Basil was greatly admired and respected, and was called
‘Basil the Great’. Soon after his death he was declared a Saint by the
Eastern Orthodox Church.

Some of his sermon collections have been preserved, including the Hexaëmeron
(= ‘Six Days’), nine Lenten sermons on the days of creation in Genesis
1. Some quotations from this show that Basil believed:

In an instantaneous and recent creation.

‘Thus then, if it is said, “In the beginning God created”, it
is to teach us that at the will of God the world arose in less than an instant,
and it is to convey this meaning more clearly that other interpreters have said:
“God made summarily” that is to say all at once and in a moment.’
(Homily
I:6)

Speaking of Day 3: ‘“Let the earth”, the Creator adds, “bring
forth the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind, whose seed is in itself.”
At this command every copse was thickly planted; all the trees, fir, cedar, cypress,
pine, rose to their greatest height, the shrubs were straightway clothed with thick
foliage.’ (Homily
V:6)

‘“Let the earth bring forth.” This short command was in a moment
a vast nature, an elaborate system. Swifter than thought it produced the countless
qualities of plants.’ (Homily
V:10)

Speaking of Day 5: ‘“And God said, Let the waters bring forth abundantly
the moving creature that hath life” after their kind, “and fowl that
may fly above the earth” after their kind. The command was given, and immediately
the rivers and lakes becoming fruitful brought forth their natural broods; the sea
travailed with all kinds of swimming creatures; not even in mud and marshes did
the water remain idle; it took its part in creation. Everywhere from its ebullition
frogs, gnats and flies came forth. For that which we see to-day is the sign of the
past. Thus everywhere the water hastened to obey the Creator’s command.’
(Homily
VII:1)

The days of Genesis Chapter 1 were 24-hour days.

‘“And there was evening and there was morning: one day.” And the
evening and the morning were one day. Why does Scripture say “one day the
first day”? Before speaking to us of the second, the third, and the fourth
days, would it not have been more natural to call that one the first which began
the series? If it therefore says “one day”, it is from a wish to determine
the measure of day and night, and to combine the time that they contain. Now twenty-four
hours fill up the space of one day—we mean of a day and of a night; and if,
at the time of the solstices, they have not both an equal length, the time marked
by Scripture does not the less circumscribe their duration. It is as though it said:
twenty-four hours measure the space of a day, or that, in reality a day is the time
that the heavens starting from one point take to return there. Thus, every time
that, in the revolution of the sun, evening and morning occupy the world, their
periodical succession never exceeds the space of one day.’ (Homily II:8)

The order of events in Genesis Chapter 1, days one to six are as it happened. For
example, plants were created before the sun.

‘“And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to
give light upon the earth, and to divide the day from the night”. Heaven and
earth were the first; after them was created light; the day had been distinguished
from the night, then had appeared the firmament and the dry element. The water had
been gathered into the reservoir assigned to it, the earth displayed its productions,
it had caused many kinds of herbs to germinate and it was adorned with all kinds
of plants. However, the sun and the moon did not yet exist, in order that those
who live in ignorance of God may not consider the sun as the origin and the father
of light, or as the maker of all that grows out of the earth. That is why there
was a fourth day, and then God said: “Let there be lights in the firmament
of the heaven.”’ (Homily
VI:2)

Evolutionary ideas are contrary to Scripture.

‘Avoid the nonsense of those arrogant philosophers who do not blush to liken
their soul to that of a dog; who say that they have been formerly themselves women,
shrubs, fish. Have they ever been fish? I do not know; but I do not fear to affirm
that in their writings they show less sense than fish.’ (Homily VIII:2)

The Creation was originally ‘very good’ and completely lacking in evil.

‘“And God saw that it was good.” God does not judge of the beauty
of His work by the charm of the eyes, and He does not form the same idea of beauty
that we do. What He esteems beautiful is that which presents in its perfection all
the fitness of art, and that which tends to the usefulness of its end. He, then,
who proposed to Himself a manifest design in His works, approved each one of them,
as fulfilling its end in accordance with His creative purpose.’ (Homily III:10)

‘“In the beginning God created”. He did not make the thing itself
the cause of its existence. Being good, He made it an useful work. Being wise, He
made it everything that was most beautiful. Being powerful He made it very great.
Moses almost shows us the finger of the supreme artisan taking possession of the
substance of the universe, forming the different parts in one perfect accord, and
making a harmonious symphony result from the whole.’ (Homily
I:7)

Speaking of Day 3: ‘But then the rose was without thorns; since then the thorn
has been added to its beauty, to make us feel that sorrow is very near to pleasure,
and to remind us of our sin, which condemned the earth to produce thorns and caltrops.’
(Homily
III:6)

Animals and humans were created vegetarian

In another work,2 Basil affirmed that
animals were not eaten in the original creation:

‘Let the Church neglect nothing; everything is a law. God did not say: “I
have given you the fishes for food, I have given you the cattle, the reptiles, the
quadrupeds.” It is not for this that He created, says the Scripture. In fact,
the first legislation allowed the use of fruits, for we were still judged worthy
of Paradise.

‘What is the mystery which is concealed for you under this?

‘To you, to the wild animals and the birds, says the Scripture, fruits, vegetation
and herbs (are given) … We see, however, many wild animals which do not eat
fruits. what fruit does the panther accept to nourish itself? What fruit can the
lion satisfy himself with?

‘Nevertheless, these beings, submitting to the law of natures, were nourished
by fruits. But when man changed his way of life and departed from the limit which
had been assigned him, the Lord, after the Flood, knowing that men were wasteful,
allowed them the use of all foods; “eat all that in the same was as edible
plants” (Gen. 9:3). By this allowance, the other animals also received the
liberty to eat them [CMI would say the animals began to eat meat after the Fall,
which is the big discontinuity, as Basil himself says].

‘Since then the lion is a carnivore, since then also vultures watch for carrion.
For the vultures were not yet looking over the earth at the very moment when the
animals were born; in fact, nothing of what had received designation or existence
had yet died so that the vultures might eat them. Nature had not yet divided, for
it was all in its freshness: hunters did not capture, for such was not yet the practice
of men; the beasts, for their part, did not yet tear their prey, for they were not
carnivores … But all followed the way of the swans, and all grazed on the
grass of the meadow …

‘Such was the first creation, and such will be the restoration after this.
Man will return to his ancient constitution in rejecting malice, a life weighed
down with cares, the slavery of the soul with regard to daily worries. When he has
renounced all this, he will return to that paradisal life which was not enslaved
to the passions of the flesh, which is free, the life of closeness to God, a partaker
of the life of the angels.’ (On the origin of Man2:6–7)

The words are to be understood by their plain meaning, not allegorized.

‘I know the laws of allegory, though less by myself than from the works of
others. There are those truly, who do not admit the common sense of the Scriptures,
for whom water is not water, but some other nature, who see in a plant, in a fish,
what their fancy wishes, who change the nature of reptiles and of wild beasts to
suit their allegories, like the interpreters of dreams who explain visions in sleep
to make them serve their own ends. For me grass is grass; plant, fish, wild beast,
domestic animal, I take all in the literal sense. “For I am not ashamed of
the Gospel” [Rom. 1:16].’ (Homily
IX:1)

To interpret Scripture otherwise is to put ourselves above God, the Holy Spirit,
who inspired its writing.

‘It is this which those seem to me not to have understood, who, giving themselves
up to the distorted meaning of allegory, have undertaken to give a majesty of their
own invention to Scripture. It is to believe themselves wiser than the Holy Spirit,
and to bring forth their own ideas under a pretext of exegesis. Let us hear Scripture
as it has been written.’ (Homily
IX:1)

Basil countered various heresies in his writings and it is clear that, as today,
there was a strong link between allegorizing Genesis and all manner of strange interpretations
of the rest of Scripture.

Related Articles

Reference

This article was adapted from David Watson, ‘An early View
of Genesis One’, Creation Research Society Quarterly27(4):138–139,
1991. Based on: Stanislaus Giet (translator), Homélies sur L’Hexaëmeron
by St Basil, originally written in AD 370. In the series
Sources Chrétiennes, Les Editions du Gerf, Paris, 1949. [Update
5 December 2001: more information about Basil added; quotes from this source replaced
with corresponding sections from the
online English translation of the Hexaëmeron, with hyperlinks
to the relevant homilies; and quote on vegetarianism] Return to Text

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